Fig. 9.—Outline of Sampling Scheme, Anaconda.
Fig. 10.—Section through Sampling Mill.
The Anaconda Sampling Plant is entirely automatic in its action. The mill is built in two sections, each of which treats 1,800 tons daily. Each section consists of a set of four sampling machines with intermediate crushers. The ore goes from the bin to a Blake crusher, breaking to 3-inch to 4-inch size; the crushed ore is elevated and fed down a chute to the first sample cutter, which takes out one-fifth (400 lbs. per ton) as a sample, and deflects the rest down another chute. The sample is crushed further in a Blake crusher, and passes a second sample cutter (rather smaller in size), which again takes out one-fifth (80 lbs. for every original ton of ore), and rejects the rest down the “rejects-chute.” The sample is now crushed in rolls, a third cut of one-fifth (16 lbs. of the ton) taken as before, the rest rejected. The sample passes to a final set of crushing rolls, and the last cut of one-fifth is taken. Hence each ton of ore is represented eventually by 3·2 lbs. of sample.
The sample cutter employed is of the Brunton form. It consists essentially of a curved boat of 120° arc, which rotates to and fro on a central spindle. The top is open; one side has one hole cut in, the other has two, the area of the latter being together four times that of the single one, so that the falling stream is cut continually, and one-fifth is deflected to one side, falling down a chute to the next crusher, whilst the other four-fifths fall from the other side to the rejects-chute.